The Borneo Post

Refs can abandon WC matches over crowd discrimina­tion

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ZURICH: FIFA has reiterated that referees will have the power to abandon matches at this month’s World Cup in cases of persistent discrimina­tion in the crowd.

Russia has pledged to crack down on racism as the country faces increased scrutiny before and during the tournament which it will host from June 14 to July 15 in 11 cities including Moscow, St Petersburg and Sochi.

But there is still concern over the situation and England defender Danny Rose said on Wednesday that he has told his family not to attend the World Cup because he feared they may be racially abused.

FIFA secretary- general Fatma Samoura said the global soccer body took discrimina­tion very seriously.

“Besides educationa­l measures ... we have systems in place to react to and sanction discrimina­tory acts as well as measures to ensure a discrimina­tion-free environmen­t at the FIFA World Cup,” she said in a FIFA statement on Thursday.

FIFA said that, for the first time in the tournament’s 88-year history, there would be a dedicated anti- discrimina­tion monitoring system at each match.

A team of three observers from the anti- discrimina­tion FARE network would watch the behaviour of fans from both teams and neutrals.

“Those observers understand the language and are trained on the regional specificit­ies of the respective fan cultures,” said the statement.

FIFA said referees could also intervene under the so- called three-step procedure.

Besides educationa­l measures ... we have systems in place to react to and sanction discrimina­tory acts as well as measures to ensure a discrimina­tion-free environmen­t at the FIFA World Cup.

The referees will have the authority to first stop the game and request a public announceme­nt asking for the discrimina­tory behaviour to cease.

They can then suspend the match if it continues and ultimately abandon it.

FARE’s executive director Piara Power said the monitoring system had been “very effective” in the World Cup qualifiers especially in identifyin­g homophobic behaviour.

A number of teams, mainly from Latin America, were fined or suffered stadium closures as a result of their reports.

“If issues arise, the observer system allows us to identify them early and have action taken during a match,” he said.

FIFA’s head of sustainabi­lity and diversity Federico Addiechi said that everyone who is part of the match organisati­on, including staff, volunteers, teams, stewards and security personnel, had been trained to take action if necessary. — Reuters

Fatma Samoura, FIFA secretary-general

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 ??  ?? A poster announcing the opening of the FIFA World Cup 2018 Fan Fest is placed in front of a mural depicting Superheroe­s playing football in downtown Moscow. — AFP photo
A poster announcing the opening of the FIFA World Cup 2018 Fan Fest is placed in front of a mural depicting Superheroe­s playing football in downtown Moscow. — AFP photo

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